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		Lobster population falls off New England, 
		leading regulators to declare overfishing 
		[October 31, 2025]  
		By PATRICK WHITTLE PORTLAND, 
		Maine (AP) — A new report says America’s lobsters, which have been in 
		decline since 2018, are now being overfished off New England.
 The stock has declined by 34% since that year in its most important 
		fishing grounds, the regulatory Atlantic States Marine Fisheries 
		Commission said Thursday. The commission said it now considers 
		overfishing of the species to be occurring, and that could bring new 
		management measures that restrict fishermen from catching them in the 
		future.
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		A lobster guards its territory in front of a trap on Sept. 3, 2018, near 
		Biddeford, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File) | 
	
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				Lobsters are among America's most lucrative seafood species, and 
				they were worth more than $700 million at the docks last year. 
				The industry caught record high numbers of the crustaceans in 
				the 2010s.
 But the lobster population has shown “rapid declines in 
				abundance in recent years,” the commission said in a statement.
 
 The assessment said the decline and overfishing were taking 
				place in fishing areas off Maine and Massachusetts where most 
				lobster fishing takes place. The assessment also considered the 
				southern New England lobster stock, which it said has been 
				depleted for years and remains so.
 
 Regulators have attempted to enforce new rules on lobster 
				fishermen to try to stem the decline in recent years, but they 
				have been met with resistance. They had planned to increase the 
				minimal harvest size for lobsters in key fishing grounds this 
				summer. That would have required fishermen to throw back 
				lobsters that previously could have been sold.
 
 The commission backed off the rules earlier this year after 
				months of protest from lobster fishermen who found the new rules 
				unnecessary and threatening to their livelihoods. Fishermen in 
				the industry are also contending with challenges from potential 
				new rules to protect rare whales, warming oceans and volatile 
				trade markets.
 
 “Even as the resource adjusts from record highs, lobstermen 
				remain deeply committed to stewardship, sustainable practices, 
				and to protecting the fishery that sustains thousands of Maine 
				families,” said Patrice McCarron, executive director of the 
				Maine Lobstermen's Association.
 
 The American lobster fishery is based mostly in Maine. Carl 
				Wilson, commissioner of the Maine Department of Marine 
				Resources, said the state “will continue to engage industry in 
				discussions about the stock assessment and the future of the 
				fishery” and he is “confident in the commitment of this industry 
				to conservation of this resource.”
 
			
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